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Measurements of magnetic field alignment
The procedure for installing Superconducting Super Collider (SSC) dipoles in their respective cryostats involves aligning the average direction of their field with the vertical to an accuracy of 0.5 mrad. The equipment developed for carrying on these measurements is described and the measurements performed on the first few prototypes SSC magnets are presented. The field angle as a function of position in these 16.6 m long magnets is a characteristic of the individual magnet with possible feedback information to its manufacturing procedure. A comparison of this vertical alignment characteristic with a magnetic field intensity (by NMR) characteristic for one of the prototypes is also presented. 5 refs., 7 figs
Dvoretzky type theorems for multivariate polynomials and sections of convex bodies
In this paper we prove the Gromov--Milman conjecture (the Dvoretzky type
theorem) for homogeneous polynomials on , and improve bounds on
the number in the analogous conjecture for odd degrees (this case
is known as the Birch theorem) and complex polynomials. We also consider a
stronger conjecture on the homogeneous polynomial fields in the canonical
bundle over real and complex Grassmannians. This conjecture is much stronger
and false in general, but it is proved in the cases of (for 's of
certain type), odd , and the complex Grassmannian (for odd and even and
any ). Corollaries for the John ellipsoid of projections or sections of a
convex body are deduced from the case of the polynomial field conjecture
An easy way to solve two-loop vertex integrals
Negative dimensional integration is a step further dimensional regularization
ideas. In this approach, based on the principle of analytic continuation,
Feynman integrals are polynomial ones and for this reason very simple to
handle, contrary to the usual parametric ones. The result of the integral
worked out in must be analytically continued again --- of course --- to
real physical world, , and this step presents no difficulties. We consider
four two-loop three-point vertex diagrams with arbitrary exponents of
propagators and dimension. These original results give the correct well-known
particular cases where the exponents of propagators are equal to unity.Comment: 13 pages, LaTeX, 4 figures, misprints correcte
Vacuum creation of quarks at the time scale of QGP thermalization and strangeness enhancement in heavy-ion collisions
The vacuum parton creation in quickly varying external fields is studied at
the time scale of order 1 fm/ typical for the quark-gluon plasma formation
and thermalization. To describe the pre-equilibrium evolution of the system the
transport kinetic equation is employed. It is shown that the dynamics of
production process at times comparable with particle inverse masses can deviate
considerably from that based on classical Schwinger-like estimates for
homogeneous and constant fields. One of the effects caused by non-stationary
chromoelectric fields is the enhancement of the yield of quark
pairs. Dependence of this effect on the shape and duration of the field pulse
is studied together with the influence of string fusion and reduction of quark
masses.Comment: REVTEX, 11pp. incl. 4 figures, to be published in Phys. Lett.
Prolactin
During an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) glucose and insulin levels were measured in 26 patients with prolactin-producing pituitary tumours without growth hormone excess. Basal glucose and insulin levels did not differ from the values of an age-matched control group. After glucose load the hyperprolactinaemic patients showed a decrease in glucose tolerance and a hyperinsulinaemia. Bromocriptine (CB 154), which suppressed PRL, improved glucose tolerance and decreased insulin towards normal in a second OGTT. — Human PRL or CB 154 had no significant influence on insulin release due to glucose in the perfused rat pancreas. — These findings suggest a diabetogenic effect of PRL. CB 154 might be a useful drug in improving glucose utilization in hormone-active pituitary tumours
Incidence and control of bovine gastrointestinal nematodes in the East of the Province of La Pampa, Argentina
A cross-sectional survey including 350 stocking farms and bovine establishments that operate the full cycle (FC) as well as fattening operations (IN) was carried out in the East of the Province of La Pampa to record cases of verminous gastroenteritis (VGE) as well as control and management practices applied by the farmers.Farms were stratified by herd size into three categories: more than 900 (G), 900-500 (M) and 500-300 (P) bovines. Samples from each category were collected at random. 33% of the farmers surveyed indicated that their animals had been affected by clinical cases of VGE with morbidity and mortality rates between 11.2% and 0.42%, respectively. More cases of VEG (P<0.004, X2 8.33) occurred in herds on FC establishments (37%) that on fattening farms (IN) (21%); the relative risk (RR) was 1.77 (95%; IC 1.18 – 2.74) but no differences were noted between categories. Ninety-four percent of the farmers use avermectins alone (AVM) (71%) or combined with benzimidazole (BZD, 20%) or levamisole (3%); 6% use BZD alone. The percentage of use of other drugs in addition to AVM increases (P<0.005, X2 7.80) with larger herds (G: 32%, M: 21%, P: 15%). Of the treatments, 95.2% include avermectins alone in injectable form (82.6%) or combined with oral (16.5%) or intraruminal (0.9%) forms. Approximately 2.42 treatments per year are performed and are more prevalent (P<0.01) in G and IN farms (2.7 treatments). 35% of the farmers deworm twice a year, in the fall (between March and July) and in late winter-spring (between August and October-), 16% deworm only once (between February and April) and 12% twice (between late summer and early winter). 18% of the farmers (G: 24%, M: 18%; P: 13%) prevent VGE losses by administering treatment at a specific time of the year. 60% of the farmers consult the veterinarian although only 29% perform an egg count (hpg) although differences (P<0.001) between herd sizes were noted: G: 41%, M: 26%; P 19%. 12% (FC 10%; IN 16%). 12% of the farmers (FC 10%; IN 16%) perform a follow-up of parasite infections with an egg count and administer treatment based on this monitoring and the recommendation of a veterinarian. 94% of those surveyed indicated that VGE alone (55%) or in conjunction with other pathologies were a major problem and 30% said it was the main health problem. The study shows the economic importance of GIPs for the competitiveness of the systems in the region. The use of a significant quantity of anthelmintics, mainly avermectins, and a low participation of veterinarians in planning the controls were observed. A trend indicating that large farms and fattening operations assign more importance to control, use of anthelmintics and participation of professionals was noted
Solar-Type Post-T Tauri Stars in the Nearest OB Subgroups
I discuss results from the recent spectroscopic survey for solar-type pre-MS
stars in the Lower Centaurus-Crux (LCC) and Upper Centaurus-Lupus (UCL) OB
subgroups by Mamajek, Meyer, & Liebert (2002, AJ, 124, 1670). LCC and UCL are
subgroups of the Sco-Cen OB association, and the two nearest OB subgroups to
the Sun. In the entire survey of 110 pre-main sequence stars, there exists only
one Classical T Tauri star (PDS 66), implying that only ~1% of ~1 Msun stars
are still accreting at age 137 (1) Myr. Accounting for
observational errors, the HRD placement of the pre-MS stars is consistent with
the bulk of star-formation taking place within 5-10 Myr. In this contribution,
I estimate conservative upper limits to the intrinsic velocity dispersions of
the post-T Tauri stars in the LCC and UCL subgroups (<1.6 km/s and <2.2 km/s,
respectively; 95% CL) using Monte-Carlo simulations of Tycho-2 proper motions
for candidate subgroup members. I also demonstrate that a new OB subgroup
recently proposed to exist in Chamaeleon probably does not.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, to appear in proceedings for "Open Issues in
Local Star Formation and Early Stellar Evolution", eds. J. Gregorio-Hetem &
J. Lepine. Minor edits (5/30/03
Negative Kaons in Dense Baryonic Matter
Kaon polarization operator in dense baryonic matter of arbitrary isotopic
composition is calculated including s- and p-wave kaon-baryon interactions. The
regular part of the polarization operator is extracted from the realistic
kaon-nucleon interaction based on the chiral and 1/N_c expansion. Contributions
of the Lambda(1116), Sigma(1195), Sigma*(1385) resonances are taken explicitly
into account in the pole and regular terms with inclusion of mean-field
potentials. The baryon-baryon correlations are incorporated and fluctuation
contributions are estimated. Results are applied for K- in neutron star matter.
Within our model a second-order phase transition to the s-wave K- condensate
state occurs at rho_c \gsim 4 \rho_0 once the baryon-baryon correlations are
included. We show that the second-order phase transition to the p-wave
condensate state may occur at densities in
dependence on the parameter choice. We demonstrate that a first-order phase
transition to a proton-enriched (approximately isospin-symmetric) nucleon
matter with a p-wave K- condensate can occur at smaller densities, \rho\lsim 2
\rho_0. The transition is accompanied by the suppression of hyperon
concentrations.Comment: 41 pages, 24 figures, revtex4 styl
Brane gravity, higher derivative terms and non-locality
In brane world scenarios with a bulk scalar field between two branes it is
known that 4-dimensional Einstein gravity is restored at low energies on either
brane. By using a gauge-invariant gravitational and scalar perturbation
formalism we extend the theory of weak gravity in the brane world scenarios to
higher energies, or shorter distances. We argue that weak gravity on either
brane is indistinguishable from 4-dimensional higher derivative gravity,
provided that the inter-brane distance (radion) is stabilized, that the
background bulk scalar field is changing near the branes and that the
background bulk geometry near the branes is warped. This argument holds for a
general conformal transformation to a frame in which matter on the branes is
minimally coupled to the metric. In particular, Newton's constant and the
coefficients of curvature-squared terms in the 4-dimensional effective action
are determined up to an ambiguity of adding a Gauss-Bonnet topological term. In
other words, we provide the brane-world realization of the so called
-model without utilizing a quantum theory. We discuss the appearance of
composite spin-2 and spin-0 fields in addition to the graviton on the brane and
point out a possibility that the spin-0 field may play the role of an effective
inflaton to drive brane-world inflation. Finally, we conjecture that the
sequence of higher derivative terms is an infinite series and, thus, indicates
non-locality in the brane world scenarios.Comment: Latex, 18 pages; a comment on the spurious tensor mode was added;
recovery condition of higher derivative gravity clarifie
Conformal aspects of Palatini approach in Extended Theories of Gravity
The debate on the physical relevance of conformal transformations can be
faced by taking the Palatini approach into account to gravitational theories.
We show that conformal transformations are not only a mathematical tool to
disentangle gravitational and matter degrees of freedom (passing from the
Jordan frame to the Einstein frame) but they acquire a physical meaning
considering the bi-metric structure of Palatini approach which allows to
distinguish between spacetime structure and geodesic structure. Examples of
higher-order and non-minimally coupled theories are worked out and relevant
cosmological solutions in Einstein frame and Jordan frames are discussed
showing that also the interpretation of cosmological observations can
drastically change depending on the adopted frame
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